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S3E2: Sticks and Stones: The Problem of Hate Speech
Episode 22

S3E2: Sticks and Stones: The Problem of Hate Speech

We all know the phrase: “sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.” But is that actually true? Recent research in psychology has shown that words can cause a plethora of different harms. Should this make us re-think our approach to hate speech? In the US we’ve been hesitant to regulate hate speech, while other countries have been incredibly stringent. Which approach is right, and why? And, how do we even define what hate speech is anyway? To get some answers we sit down with Yale Professor Robert Post and Laura Beth Nielsen the Chair of the Department of Sociology at Northwestern University.

Entitled

November 2, 202352m 10s

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Show Notes

We all know the phrase: “sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.” But is that actually true? Recent research in psychology has shown that words can cause a plethora of different harms. Should this make us re-think our approach to hate speech?

In the US we’ve been hesitant to regulate hate speech, while other countries have been incredibly stringent. Which approach is right, and why? And, how do we even define what hate speech is anyway?

To get some answers we sit down with Yale Professor Robert Post and Laura Beth Nielsen the Chair of the Department of Sociology at Northwestern University.

 


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Topics

tom ginsburgyaleuniversity of chicago podcast networkucpnlaw podcastgovernment podcastlawyersgovernmentlawentitled podcasthate speechrights podcastyale podcastentitledrightslawyer podcastuniversity of chicagohuman rights podcastnorthwestern universityhuman rightsclaudia florespsychology